Kirby's latest could be a bare necessity at New End

Preview by Paul Nelson

MODERN Man, Roger Kirby's new play, crackles with sexual
tension and jealousy as the muses who helped painter Edouard Manet
become famous confront him and each other.

Victorine, whose unapologetic nudity scandalized society; the
aristocratic and beautiful Berthe Morisot; and Suzanne, his wife,
each posed for the witty, well-born painter, and each demanded
more than he was prepared to give.

Often considered the inventor of modern art, Manet's struggles
between passion for his work and desire for love, self-realisation
and the capacity to love, remain those of contemporary life.

Roger Kirby draws an elegant and provocative portrait of a man
whose decisions to pursue his genius separated him from life and
from the women who were attracted to him.

Julie Kate Olivier plays Suzanne. Her West End credits include
Cordelia in Seven Lears, Carol in Time and the Conways
(Old Vic) and Jane in Golgo at the Royal Court. She played
Lorna in Anthony Mingella's Cigarettes and Chocolate, and
she recently co-produced the documentary Safari Strife
for C4's Cutting Edge series.

Carolyn Tomkinson is Victorine. She was in Debris at The
Latchmere, and Five Kinds of Silence at The Old Red Lion.

Kate Steavenson-Payne is Berthe. She played the regular character
of Charlotte Myddleton in ITV's Bad Girls. She also appeared
in Look Back in Anger at the Royal National Theatre.

Roger Kirby has written a variety of works, both fiction and
non-fiction including A Secret Life with Babe. His first
play, Natural Inclinations,
premiered last September at The Finborough Theatre.

Modern Man by Roger Kirby. Directed by Caitriona McLaughlin,
designed by Nicolai Hart Hansen, music composed by Jane Watkins,
soundscape by Shock Productions. Presented by 71a Productions
at The New End Theatre, 27 New End, Hampstead, NW3 1JD. Box Office:
020 7794 0022